Victorian Christmas Tour of the Prouty-Chew House

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  • čas přidán 21. 12. 2020
  • Visit Historic Geneva's Prouty-Chew House at Christmas and learn how the Prouty family celebrated Christmas in the 1800s.
    For more about the Prouty family visit our three-part blog on their life in the house:
    historicgeneva.org/people/phi...
    historicgeneva.org/people/pro...
    historicgeneva.org/people/pro...
    Produced by staff and volunteers at Historic Geneva, formerly the Geneva Historical Society. Historic Geneva tells the stories of Geneva, New York. Discover these stories online and in person through the Geneva History Museum, Rose Hill Mansion, and Johnston House. For more information about us, to subscribe to our email updates, or read our blog, visit historicgeneva.org.
    Like what you see? Support us through a donation at historicgeneva.org/support/ . Keep us telling Geneva's stories!

Komentáře • 18

  • @whathappenedtomyYThandle

    Nice video. Located in New York. Took me awhile to find that on the website.

  • @jsblake199
    @jsblake199 Před rokem

    Gorgeous silver service set. Needs to be shined up!

    • @HistoricGeneva
      @HistoricGeneva  Před rokem

      Thanks, but as I noted for another commenter below, polishing the silver removes a layer of silver, so it is done very judiciously in museums. To keep the tarnish from reoccurring we would need better storage conditions and likely wouldn't be able to put them on display. Most of our building does not provide the climate conditions to prevent tarnishing. If you want to know more, there is a through explanation on the website of the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences in Australia: www.maas.museum/app/uploads/2017/02/looking_after_silver.pdf

  • @cassiopeia1889
    @cassiopeia1889 Před 2 lety +2

    Dank Albert!!

  • @lavenderflowersfall280
    @lavenderflowersfall280 Před 6 měsíci

    The intercourse of socializing, dolls that were meant only for older kids ...
    They certainly looked at life differently back then didn't they?
    The few Victorian fiction books I read back in my childhood or turn of the century spark my imagination for these times.
    Sometimes I like looking at the harder lives and sometimes I like at looking at the richer lives

  • @CFinch360
    @CFinch360 Před rokem +1

    This was very interesting, I loved it. But if that's a silver tea service in one of the rooms I wish I lived near Geneva so I could volunteer to polish it for you 🤩

    • @HistoricGeneva
      @HistoricGeneva  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for your comment and the offer to volunteer! We can always use help, but polishing silver is one thing we don't do under normal circumstances. Polishing the silver actually removes a layer of silver, so it is done very judiciously in museums. You must store the polished items properly in order to avoid the tarnish reoccurring. In order to keep our silver items looking new, we wouldn't be able to put them out in our period rooms and in fact, most of our building is not ideal for conserving items like this. If you want to know more, there is a through explanation on the website of the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences in Australia: www.maas.museum/app/uploads/2017/02/looking_after_silver.pdf

  • @yolandagarza8489
    @yolandagarza8489 Před 2 lety +2

    Enjoyable video indeed, thank you for sharing this beautiful Victoria Christmas decorations,love from Texas USA💘🌲🎄

  • @d.l.l.6578
    @d.l.l.6578 Před rokem

    What state is this? Nobody knows where Geneva is.

    • @HistoricGeneva
      @HistoricGeneva  Před rokem

      We are in Geneva, NY in the Finger Lakes region. To learn more see the links in the description.

  • @sprre3899
    @sprre3899 Před rokem +1

    Love those Victorian carbon monoxide detectors.

    • @HistoricGeneva
      @HistoricGeneva  Před rokem +1

      Hey, safety first! We don't force visitors to use an outhouse either!

  • @rebekahdavis5935
    @rebekahdavis5935 Před 2 lety

    When she wrote what she did in her diary..did she mean that her kids were so bratty that it was inevitable that people would not want to come to visit? lol it seemed like that was what she was saying??

    • @HistoricGeneva
      @HistoricGeneva  Před 2 lety +3

      I've taken it to mean that she was a mother of very young children who wanted to restore some social life but was embarrassed because her children would not behave as she expected in front of company. The girls were just 2 and 4 years old. I picture her throwing up her hands despairing of having visitors again. They did have plenty more visitors at the house after this and she eventually had four girls to corral.

  • @marycornejo492
    @marycornejo492 Před 2 lety +2

    How disrespectful to have Clothes on a Hanging Rack at the Top of the Stairs. I "Clicked Out"

    • @HistoricGeneva
      @HistoricGeneva  Před 2 lety +4

      I am sorry that you were offended by that. It is not an ideal location for clothing to be stored, but our building is beyond capacity and there are currently very few storage options available to us. The second floor is not open to the public and is normally blocked off. This building is nearly 200 years old and was never intended to be an office, exhibit gallery, or collections storage facility but has to serve as all three. We are in the process of renovating another building to hold excess collections, but it is a long and costly project that will not be complete before next year.

    • @annamiljevic8632
      @annamiljevic8632 Před rokem +7

      Ouch. We are all so sad and need therapy now because you "clicked out"

    • @thatgirlmadge
      @thatgirlmadge Před rokem

      You must have a miserable life Mary Cornejo. What type of person gets upset about something as trivial as clothes hanging at the top of the stairs?!! Cybil's mother...